Word: graffitiing
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April is Queer Month at Harvard--and queer has been the response. Since Queer Month began, numerous events have been held including a Queer Politics dinner, with participants including national gay rights activists at Dunster, a Gay Activism Forum at the Kennedy School, and anti-gay graffiti scrawled on the wall in the main entrance of Dunster house by some unknown vandals. We are dismayed by the outburst of anti-gay sentiment that stained Dunster's wall as it tarnished the positive feeling of Queer Month. We hope that this month and the vandalism incident will be used not only...
...agree with Jane I. Aceituno '98, co-chair of Bisexual, Gay, Lesbian, and Transgendered Students' Association, that the graffiti may well have been a response to the publicity that issues surrounding homosexuality have been getting in the days since Queer Month began. If Queer Month is to serve the role of educating the Harvard student body about homosexuality, then its organizers should take this upsetting event as an impetus to bring the homophobia latent on this campus to the fore and to find constructive ways of dealing with it. At the same time, the administration should follow the Kennedy School...
Homophobic graffiti was discovered in Dunster House the morning after leaders of the gay movement had dinner at the house on April...
...success of Queer Harvard Month has been tempered by the graffiti in Dunster House and the poster disappearance, Aceituno said...
While most of the residents do not believe that a someone from Dunster wrote the word "FAGGOT" on the walls, the graffiti made them realize that the atmosphere in the house has changed and will continue to do so with randomization...